Authors: Jay Northcote
that caught his interest.
Jez felt a question he’d been wanting to ask Josh for ages itching at
the back of his m ind. He sighed and shifted in his seat, picking at the skin
around his fingers as he tried to work up the courage.
He finally asked, the words com ing out in a rush, “When did y ou
know y ou were gay ?”
The sound of the pages turning stopped, and there was a long silence.
When Jez finally dared to look up, Josh was watching him with a
thoughtful expression. Jez was relieved to see there wasn’t a trace of
teasing there, but he felt his cheeks heat any way.
“I dunno. Alway s, m ay be? There wasn’t a big sudden ‘oh m y God,
I’m gay ’ m om ent for m e. I alway s had crushes on boy s, and when I
worked out what m y dick was for, I didn’t want to put it in girls. So it was
pretty obvious.”
“So, y ou’ve never…?”
“I tried it once.” Josh wrinkled his nose and chuckled. “But I couldn’t
get it up, so that only m ade m e m ore sure.” There was a long pause, and
for a m om ent Jez thought he m ight have got away without having to talk
about him self. But Josh held his gaze, and his green ey es were curious.
“Why do y ou want to know?”
Jez winced inwardly. But if he didn’t want to talk about it, he shouldn’t
have brought it up in the first place. “I, um ….” He took a deep breath. “I
think I like guy s. But I like girls too, so I didn’t take the liking-blokes part
seriously before.”
“Before what?”
Jez floundered for a m om ent. No way was he going to m ention
Mac’s part in his realisations. “Nothing specific. I’ve j ust been thinking
about it a lot recently —and watching gay porn.” That part was true, and
it had been very enlightening.
Josh’s lips curved in a knowing sm ile, and his lip ring glinted where it
caught the light. “Is this the bit where y ou ask if y ou can test out the
theory with m e? Because I would—if y ou wanted to.”
Jez gaped in shock, because that absolutely wasn’t what he was
suggesting, but he let him self im agine it for a split second. It would be
straightforward with Josh. He was attractive, there would be no
com plicated feelings, and Jez would be with som eone who knew what he
was doing and was into it 100 percent—phy sically, at least. It would be
the perfect way to test out his newfound interest in m en and m ay be to
experim ent with som e of the things Jez wanted to try but didn’t dare
suggest to Mac. But no…. Jez felt a strange sense of loy alty to Mac even
though it was totally m isplaced. He didn’t for a m om ent think that Mac
would care about him fooling around with som eone else, but it didn’t feel
right. Plus having sex with one housem ate was awkward enough; the last
thing Jez needed was to m ake his life even m ore com plicated.
“No. That’s not what this conversation was about. But… thanks for
the offer, really.”
“Any tim e.” Josh grinned. “Deflowering gay virgins is fun.”
“Fuck off.” Jez snorted. “I’m not com pletely innocent.”
“Oh y eah?” Josh looked gleeful at the potential for gossip.
Jez ignored him and picked up his coffee, taking a gulp to stop
him self from oversharing. It was tem pting to spill every thing to Josh, but
Jez couldn’t risk it. Not when the secret belonged to Mac as well as him .
When it was obvious that no m ore j uicy details were forthcom ing,
Josh picked up his m agazine again and went back to reading.
Jez finished his coffee in silence, but his thoughts were deafening.
Chapter Seven
In late Novem ber it was Shawn’s birthday. There was no way Jez
and Mac could get away with stay ing in when all their m ates were going
out to help Shawn celebrate, so they invoked the special occasion clause
in their pact and agreed to j oin the others for once.
It felt weird getting ready to go out after so m any nights in. They
were going clubbing, but there was no dress code; casual would be fine.
Even so, Jez m ade m ore effort with his appearance than he had done in
m onths. He showered and dressed in his best j eans and a black T-shirt that
hugged his torso and em phasised his narrow waist and wide shoulders.
His shaggy, dirty -blond hair didn’t need m uch sty ling, so he j ust com bed
a little wax through it to keep it from going fluffy. He stared in the m irror
critically. Not bad. He tilted his face so the light caught the golden brown
stubble on his j aw. Yeah. He’d do.
Jez went down to the living room where a whole gang of people was
hanging out. As well as his housem ates there were also several other
friends of Shawn’s, m ost of whom Jez had m et before. They were all
getting stuck into the booze—preloading to save m oney on overpriced
beers in the pubs and clubs they ’d be hitting later. There were a ton of
bottles on the coffee table, beer, wine, and cheap brands of vodka and
whisky, and various m ixers. Upbeat m usic poured out of the speakers, and
Jez felt a thrill of excitem ent. He’d got used to stay ing in, but tonight was
going to be fun. Being a herm it had its downside.
Judging by the loud conversation and raucous laughter, he had som e
catching up to do on the alcohol front. He m ade his way to the table and
poured him self a vodka and coke—light on the coke, heavy on the vodka.
He took a swig and felt the burn of the alcohol all the way to his stom ach.
“Jez, m y m an!” A heavy hand clapped on his shoulder, and he
turned to see Shawn, flushed and clearly pissed already. Knowing Shawn,
he’d probably started at lunchtim e. “You’re com ing out later, y eah?”
“Yeah. Gotta help y ou celebrate no longer being a teenager, haven’t
I?” Jez raised his glass, and Shawn bum ped it erratically with the can of
Special Brew he was holding.
“Too fucking right, m ate. ’Bout tim e y ou and that pussy Mac cam e
out and got som e action. You’ve been j oined at the hip for weeks. People
are starting to wonder about y our brom ance, y ou know.”
Jez’s stom ach lurched but he schooled his features into am used
indifference. He scanned the room quickly for Mac to see if he was
listening. Sure enough, Mac was watching their exchange from the sofa,
and he wasn’t doing a good j ob of hiding his discom fort. His j aw was
tense as he glared at Shawn.
Jez decided to front it out, but he kept his tone light. “Don’t be a dick,
Shawny. You know we’ve had our reasons for stay ing in this term .
Any way, we’re com ing out tonight. Wouldn’t m iss it.”
But Shawn frowned, drunk and aggressive. “I should hope so. I’m not
having y ou stay ing in on m y birthday. That would be so fucking gay.”
Jez’s body tensed at the word. Shawn didn’t m ean it literally. It was
one of those things people said—a stupid insult that Jez had probably
thrown out him self hundreds of tim es over the y ears. But now it m ade his
palm s sweat and his heart pound with the irrational fear that som ehow
Shawn knew.
Jez caught Mac’s ey e for a split second before looking back at
Shawn’s stupid, belligerent face. Mac appeared as stunned as Jez felt, so
he was clearly going to be no help here. Jez tried to find the right
response, afraid he’d say the wrong thing or give them away by his
expression or the tone of his voice. But before he could gather his wits
and find som e words, distraction cam e from an unexpected quarter.
“Stay ing in isn’t gay, Shawn,” Josh drawled from behind Shawn.
“We’ve been through this. Will y ou please stop with using that as an insult
for every thing? As the resident gay, I’m getting tired of hearing it.”
Shawn flushed. “It’s j ust an expression,” he m uttered, but at least he
had the grace to look guilty.
“Well, it’s a stupid one.” Josh’s ey es narrowed as if daring Shawn to
argue m ore.
There was an awkward pause. Jez was suddenly aware that the
chatter had died down. Most people in the room seem ed to be listening to
their little exchange.
“Which pub are we going to later?” Jez wanted to get the
conversation away from dangerous ground.
Luckily Shawn took the bait, and the m om ent passed. Josh gave Jez a
quick wink before turning away to talk to Dani again.
When Jez dared look back at Mac a little later, he seem ed to have
relaxed and was deep in conversation with a blonde girl Jez hadn’t seen
before. She was pretty, and she kept giggling at things Mac said and
twirling her hair. Jez ignored the unpleasant lurch of discom fort in his gut.
Mac could flirt with any one he wanted; it wasn’t Jez’s business.
In the pub, the girl—Gem m a, Jez found out when Mac introduced
them —was still hanging around Mac. It didn’t m ake Jez feel any better
when it turned out that Gem m a was not only pretty but also funny and
intelligent. She was study ing Politics and Philosophy and had opinions on
every thing. In other circum stances Jez would probably have been
attracted to her and tried to get her attention for him self, but tonight he
was uneasy and unsettled, and he was struggling to follow the
conversation because his own thoughts were too distracting.
He excused him self to go to the bar. It was busy, but it didn’t take too
long to get served as they had lots of people working. As the barm an was
pouring Jez’s pint, a girl squeezed in beside Jez, digging him in the ribs
with an elbow.
“Oops, sorry,” she said. “But when y ou’re m y height, y ou have to
be pushy.” She couldn’t have been m uch over five feet tall and looked like
a little pixie with spiky hair in an unnatural shade of red, big dark ey es,
and an upturned nose.
“I can only im agine.” Jez was six foot now and had had his growth
spurt at thirteen. He couldn’t rem em ber being that sm all.
She grinned. “Yeah, it’s okay for y ou.”
She spoke with a slight accent. Jez tried to place it—Italian, m ay be?
The barm an returned with Jez’s pint. “Any thing else?” he asked.
“Oh, could y ou get m e a pint of Dry Blackthorn if y ou’re already
being served?” the girl asked. “Here’s the m oney.” She put a pile of coins
down on the bar. Jez would have offered to pay for hers, but she pushed
them towards him insistently.
The barm an went off to pour her drink.
“I’m Gabi, by the way. You’re here for Shawn’s birthday too, y es?”
“Yes.” Jez nodded. “I’m Jez.”
“Cool.”
When they both had their drinks, Gabi j oined Jez’s group, squeezing
in beside him on the bench seat. He introduced her to Mac, and she
already knew Gem m a. Mac caught Jez’s ey e and gave a slight grin and
ey ebrow raise, m ay be in encouragem ent.
As the evening progressed, the girls stuck with them . Jez was
enj oy ing Gabi’s com pany. She was fun to talk to and cute to look at. She
wasn’t hiding her interest, and norm ally Jez would have gone for it and
flirted right back, but tonight he was distracted by what was going on with
Mac and Gem m a. He found him self listening in to their conversation
instead of pay ing attention to Gabi. A rising unease tightened his chest and
m ade his gut clench. Jez was reluctant to adm it he was j ealous, but deep
down he recognised the unfam iliar em otion even though he tried to
ignore it. Instead he tried to drown his feelings in beer. If he drank
enough, he m ight m anage to stop m oping around after his m ate and get
with the program . Gabi was into him , and she was cool. It had been way
too long since he’d hooked up with a girl. May be he needed to get back in
the saddle.
By the tim e they got to the club, Jez was well on the way to being
drunk but not quite at the sloppy stage. He was buzzed and feeling m ore
chilled, the alcohol tem porarily clouding his anxieties. Gabi took his hand
and pulled him towards the packed dance floor, and he followed. Once
they were lost in the throng, she turned to face him . Pressed close by the
crowd, it was easier to dance with his hands on her hips. She put her arm s
around his neck, tilted her head back, and sm iled.
Jez let his gaze roam over the rest of the dancers. Lots of the others
from their group had j oined them . He caught sight of Shawn with a
curly -haired girl, and Josh and Dani dancing together—blatantly dirty
dancing in a com pletely over-the-top way —and then he found who he
was looking for. Mac’s dark head stood out because he was a couple of
inches taller than m ost other blokes, and sure enough, he was dancing